Michelle Obama Aide Tells Reporters Not to Talk to Audience Members

1 Oct 2014

A Wisconsin reporter claims that First Lady Michelle Obama’s handlers demanded that journalists avoid speaking to any members of the audience who attended the first lady’s recent Milwaukee campaign event.

“[A]ssigned to cover Michelle Obama’s speech today,” the reporter posted, “and was told by a Mary Burke aide and one for the White House that I could not speak to the people in the crowd. To say that I was creeped out is an understatement. This is what reporters do in America: we speak to people.”

Kissinger also noted that she and her fellow reporters were cordoned off in their own section and not allowed to mix with the public who attended the event to see the first lady.

“Reporters and photographers were cordoned off in a central area with chairs and tables. Several people in the crowd asked if they could (borrow) extra chairs reserved for the media–but reporters were initially forbidden from handing them over,” the journalist wrote.

This isn’t the first time that team Obama has tried to fully control every move made by journalists. In 2011, one reporter was detained in a storage closet by Vice President Joe Biden’s staffers and prevented from reporting on a fundraiser. Several days later Biden had to apologize for the reporter’s treatment.